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Urbanisation and Globalization in the 21st century. Article by Dr. Rakesh Mohan, Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India in UN Habitat’s November Issue of Urban World
Text and cover of Urban World courtesy UN Habitat, a partner and Cooperating Organization with dgCommunity Urban Development. Dr. Rakesh Mohan, Deputy Governor, Reserve Bank of India. has researched extensively in the areas of economic reforms and liberalisation, industrial economics, urban economics, infrastructure studies and economic regulation, monetary policy and the financial sector. He is the author of three books on urban economics and urban development and co-author of a book on Indian more...
November 12, 2008
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'This is the second edition of the Youth Supplement to UNFPA’s State of World Population. The 2007 report focuses on urbanization; the Youth Supplement addresses the challenges and promises of urbanization as they affect young people. In 2008, for the first time, more than half of the world’s population will live in urban areas, and the number and proportion of urban young people is increasing dramatically. Most will be born into poor families, where fertility tends to be higher.'
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Added by  Najmee Chowdhury  November 23, 2008

BOSTON (November 18, 2008)— LEED 2009, the long-awaited update to the internationally recognized LEED green building certification program, has passed member ballot, and will be introduced in 2009 as the next major evolution of the existing LEED rating systems for commercial buildings. It includes a series of major technical advancements focused on improving energy efficiency, reducing carbon emissions, and addressing other environmental and human health outcomes.
LEED 2009 will also incor more...

Added by  Patrizia Mazzoni  November 20, 2008

'In a bold effort to privatize Rio de Janeiro's urban transport sector, the state government showed that political decisiveness, transparency, and ingenuity in developing
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Added by  Najmee Chowdhury  November 20, 2008

In 1991, the Republic of Brazil asked the World Bank’s assistance in the decentralization program of its urban rail systems run by the Companhia Brasileira de Trens Urbanos (Brazilian Urban Trains
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Added by  Najmee Chowdhury  November 20, 2008

'Policy-makers in Asia and the Pacific need to take a more integrated approach in managing urban growth in order to ensure that the rapid expanding cities in the region are both economically and environmentally sustainable, a United Nations official told the largest gathering on air quality management in the region.'

Added by  Moushumi Biswas  November 20, 2008

'Take one of the most unplanned urban centres in the world, wedge it between four flood-prone rivers in the most densely packed nation in Asia, then squeeze it between the Himalaya mountain range and a body of water that not only generates violent cyclones and the occasional tsunami, but also creeps further inland every year, washing away farmland, tainting drinking water, submerging fertile deltas, and displacing villagers as it approaches – and there you have it: Dhaka, the capital of Bangla more...

Added by  Najmee Chowdhury  November 20, 2008

The LAC urban rail program began in the early 1990s in response to a request from the Brazilian government to help decentralize the urban train system operating in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Belo Horizonte, Recife, Salvador and Fortaleza as the federal government transferred their operations to the states and municipalities.

'The government and the Bank team, led by Rebelo, saw an opportunity to radically revamp urban rail transport in Brazil. They knew that better metropolitan transportatio more...

Added by  Imran Uddin  November 19, 2008

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